[pct-l] Tarp/Bivy Combination in Washington?

Steel-Eye chelin at teleport.com
Tue Apr 3 19:04:50 CDT 2007


Good evening, Footslogger,

I had much the same idea as you.  As a tarp user, I prepared for the possibility that I might want a bug-bivy type of thing.  The bug-bivys I've seen are low but full length.  I wanted something that was about half-length but sufficiently high for me to sit under.  I fabricated such an item from bug net material, and it will either Velcro under the center of the tarp or be separately supported when I sleep under the stars.  It weighs 6.6 oz. with a small stuff sack, which is not as lite as I'd like.  I've used it and it seems to work OK, but I will hold it in reserve at home and use it only if my usual throw-net and/or head net prove inadequate.

I don't know what your itinerary is, but consider keeping your bug protection until you are mostly through Oregon.  Places like Sky Lakes can be very heavily infested, depending upon the season and how wet it has been.  I've encountered a few bugs in Washington, particularly around Indian Heaven, but most thru-hikers reach that area after the worst bug season.

Steel-Eye
http://www.trailjournals.com/entry.cfm?trailname=4645

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Mark Jernigan 
  To: Jim Keener ; Steel-Eye ; PCT-L 
  Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2007 4:00 PM
  Subject: Re: [pct-l] Tarp/Bivy Combination in Washington?


  Here's a question    ...

  What about a tarp style tent (floorless) and a bug bivy.   Have that combination right now and was considering carrying it on the PCT.  I'm guessing that by the time I get to Oregon/Washington the bug bivy might become "excess baggage", since the option of sleeping out under the stars is somewhat rare     ...but it sure would be a nice treat down south.

  Mark J (Footslogger)

  Jim Keener <jlkeener at yahoo.com> wrote:
    --- Steel-Eye wrote:

    > I haven't used the bivy/tarp combination but expect
    > that the sum of their 
    > weights would about equal one of the little
    > backpacker tents, and the tent 
    > would likely be less trouble, overall.

    Thanks for the response, Steel-Eye. You're probably
    right. If the weights were about the same, I might go
    with the combination in order to get cover (tarp) up
    before putting out a semi-shelter (bivy). I got a
    soaked tent in January on the Lost Coast and have been
    trying to figure out ways to avoid that in the future.

    Best,
    J J

    http://electricpath.com
    http://persuasiongraphics.com



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